new york times

Twitterific

I’ll admit that when I first heard about Twitter, I thought it was the most ridiculous thing in the world. As a journalist and a long time blogger, I take pride in crafting a well thought out story, with a beginning, middle and end, and a common theme running throughout.

So the idea of “micro-blogging” in bursts of no more than 140 characters at a time, as you do on Twitter, seemed to me to be entirely untenable. How could a serious writer work under such artificially composed constraints? Who would read such hastily shot off drivel?

Well, apparently a lot of people. Including me now.

Against all my better instincts, I’ve become a Twitter addict. In the age of Web 2.0, the new definition of addiction has become “someone who presses the refresh button on his or her browser more than 20 times an hour.” Guilty as charged. Twitter now has 2 million users. That’s an audience that new online media properties need to take note of – and get twittering themselves.

Twitter is part of an overall trend towards providing Web users with a constant stream of updated information. A blog – the rage of the last 5 years – seems positively passé today. When you post a “tweet,” as they’re called, you’re likely to receive a comment in return not in hours (as on an “old fashioned website or email list) but in minutes, sometimes even seconds.

In the U.S., you can set Twitter to send a whole stream of discussion to your cell phone as SMS messages. I tried that for awhile; the service is free. At first, the tens of messages I received a day made me feel important. “Look how many SMS’s I’m getting. I must be popular!” Eventually all the checking, reading and deleting got to be too much and I shut if off.

Whether via SMS or on the Web, this instant gratification is like a drug. You want more so you post more. There are Twitterphiles who update their status every hour…or less. One person I follow got stuck in the airport while returning home; he tweeted his status in real time. “Plane delayed 30 minutes.” “Visiting the bookstore now.” “Finally pre-boarding business class.”

There’s even a category called the “Twitter novel” where a few new media pioneers are writing a book in real time, posting in 140 character snippets and receiving fast feedback.

Twitter seems to be divided into two classes. Users who post every little detail about their lives (“3:00 AM, finally going to sleep,” “Which flavor of ice cream should I buy?”), and serious users who upload valuable insights and links to Web pages of serious interest (TechCrunch, GigaOm). Media properties fall into the second category where there are ample opportunties for writers, bloggers and columnists to join the conversation.

My Twitter posts have included both types of communication. I have asked questions and received feedback that have helped me think through themes for these blog posts. On the other hand, I have also tweeted about my enthusiasm for the new season of Heroes (the latter resulted in a flame by a disappointed fan) and who has the best ice coffee (hint: it’s not Starbucks).

It’s not just Twitter, of course, that’s changing the face of Web interaction. Social networking services of all kinds allow you to update your status and broadcast it to your friends. I can track my daughter’s moods from what she posts on Facebook. One time she wrote “I hate her!” I instant messaged her. “Who do you hate?” “Don’t ask me,” she quickly replied, “or I’ll ‘de-friend’ you.”

Facebook is also a godsend for finding old friends. I have re-connected with people I knew from high school, college and various projects I’ve been involved with over the years. LinkedIn, a business-focused social network, is even better for finding out what old colleagues are now up to. Other services include Dopplr (for reporting where you’re traveling) and Tumblr (for quickly tossing online a stream of the pictures, videos or Web sites you’re looking at). On both Facebook and LinkedIn, there are “groups” that allow you to mass message other participants.

With all this information flowing this way and that, you’d think that the noise pollution on the Web would have reached unbearable heights. At what point do you have to ask “Who really cares what I’m doing at every hours of the day?”

An article last month by Clive Thompson in the New York Times suggests otherwise.

Thompson says that social scientists have given the sort of incessant online contact that Twitter and Facebook engender a name: “ambient awareness.” It is, Thomson writes, “very much like being physically near someone and picking up on his mood through the little things he does — body language, sighs, stray comments — out of the corner of your eye.”

Thompson goes on. Each little update is insignificant on its own. “But taken together, over time, the little snippets coalesce into a surprisingly sophisticated portrait of your friends’ and family members’ lives, like thousands of dots making a pointillist painting. This was never before possible, because in the real world, no friend would bother to call you up and detail the sandwiches she was eating.”

Twitter can even be seen as a partial solution to social isolation. Robert Putnam, in his book “Bowling Alone” describes a world in which the mobile workforce requires people to travel more frequently for work, leaving friends and family behind. Ambient intimacy becomes a way to “feel less alone.” And the kind of “weak ties” you have on social networks can actually help you solve problems more efficiently. Thompson continues:

“If you’re looking for a job and ask your friends, they won’t be much help; they’re too similar to you, and thus probably won’t have any leads that you don’t already have yourself. Remote acquaintances will be much more useful, because they’re farther afield, yet still socially intimate enough to want to help you out.”

So far, I’m enjoying the new world of ambient intimacy. But I’m always looking for more friends smile If you’d like to join me, my Twitter address is http://twitter.com/brianblum.

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 Newspaper Consortium’s early successes point to legitimate optimism

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

NYTimes goes social networking with TimesPeople

Can The New York Times compete with Facebook? It can certainly try.

The Times’ new sharing and recommending tool TimesPeople rolled out of beta this week. It’s essentially a social news feed for Times readers / users, operating a lot like the ways Facebook users can follow news and status updates from their friends.

With TimesPeople you can create your own friends list — the Times says it’s not a “friends” list but your own “network of Times readers;” recommend or comment on stories on the site, then publish your feed. The Times already requires users to register to read the site; TimesPeople now comes with the package. With millions of registered readers, that’s a nice head start.

Like Facebook and LinkedIn, you can bulk import your e-mail contacts from GMail, Windows Live or Yahoo Mail. TimesPeople puts a new toolbar at the top of every page on the Web site. It’s a little jarring but you can turn it off. Similarly, if you just want to be an observer, you can subscribe to your friends’ updates while leaving your own feed updates turned off. There’s also an RSS feed and an I-Phone interface. The service is free and requires no download. An earlier version appeared in June but only as a Firefox plug-in.

Our question: Is it too little, too late? Facebook and other social network users can easily copy a snippet with a link from a Web site into their existing streams, so why join yet another network?

Perhaps acknowledging that fact, the Times also allows you to synch your TimesPeople feed to Facebook so that stories you’ve commented on will automatically appear on your Facebook feed. Now that, in our opinion, is a pretty useful feature.

What’s next? Maybe a TimesPeople Twitter feed? All the news that’s fit to print – in no more than 140 characters.

For more info, read the FAQ here.

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Newspaper-sized E-Reader unveiled to public

Plastic Logic, an electronic paper display technology company which last year received $100 million in venture funding, is publicly showing off its new electronic newspaper reader.

The device, which was introduced at the Demo conference this week, and on which both the New York Times and PaidContent.org are breathlessly reporting, is the size of a piece of copier paper and can be continually updated via a wireless link. It can store and display hundreds of pages of newspapers, books and documents.

The Plastic Logic device uses the same highly legible black and white E-Ink display technology as the Amazon Kindle and the Sony Reader. E-Ink does not use LCD technology of computer monitors and televisions; that means it doesn’t have a back light but at the same time, it can be viewed in high sunlight like at the beach.

The display of the new Plastic Logic unit weighs just two ounces more than the Kindle but is about twice the size. The device is thinner than a pad of paper.

The reader is slated to go on sales in the first half of next year. The New York Times reports that the display is big enough to provide a newspaper-like layout, though Plastic Logic CEO Richard Archuleta says the device was originally positioned to display business documents.

Amazon’s Kindle already does newspapers, but it’s harder to navigate in a smaller book size format.

Which newspapers will be on the Plastic Logic device? We’ll have to wait until the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January to find out. That’s also when the company will reveal pricing.

For now, check out the company’s Demo presentation here: http://www.demo.com/demonstrators/demo2008fall/147390.html

Plastic Logic’s device is not the only digital reading device focusing on the newspaper market. PaidContent.org reported earlier this year on a venture called FirstPaper which is backed by Hearst Interactive.

The company, based in Palo Alto and New York, is developing on the Linux platform and will run some version of the Firefox browser. PaidContent.org points to an article in the Seattle news site Crosscut that this past July referenced the Hearst-backed device and said that the screen would be “almost as big as a tabloid paper.” Hearst quickly denied the report. The company does distribute electronic versions of some of its newspapers on the Kindle.

Hearst seems to be hedging its bets: the company is also an investor in E-Ink.

Another device that can read newspapers is the iRex iLiad which is  8.5 by 6.1 inches. The Netherlands-based company has deals with Les Echos in France and NRC Handelsblad in the Netherlands.

The holy grail of e-newspapers, of course, would be a flexible display that can be rolled or folded like a newspaper. That’s still years off, says E-Ink. But a display with moving images and clickable advertising should be ready in just a few years, the New York Times quotes E-Inks VP for marketing Siriam Peruvemba as saying. Color should be ready by 2010.

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